
6391 Article(s) by:
Golda Gatsey
Golda Gatsey is a freelance writer and customer relationship manager.


Tomorrow is the Question
Afrofuturism and engaging prophetically with history.

Invisible labor in plain sight
South Africa has 52 million people. Around 1.1 million are domestic workers. 54,000 of those are under the age of fifteen.

Like a weary protest song that has been marching since the 1960’s

A glimpse of what could have been
The fantastical texture of the everyday in E. C. Osondu’s novel, “This House is Not for Sale.”

Which Art History in Africa?
As an art writer working in Africa, I have no available model to craft an entire practice of writing books on contemporary art in Uganda.

The wounded buffalo
President Filipe Nyusi’s government will be more remembered for preventing protests by an increasingly disenfranchised Mozambican public.

White settler states and secret police forces
How whites in South Africa, Rhodesia, Angola, and Mozambique acted in unison to thwart independence.

Eu Sou Cistac
What the murder of a well known constitutional lawyer and professor means for Mozambique.
Digitizing Ferguson
#WhiteHistoryMonth: Dr. Pierre Messmer, France’s Dirty War General

The heart of whiteness, South African edition
We don’t think Njabulo Ndebele minds that we liberally cutting and pasting from a speech he gave back in 2000, about whiteness in South Africa.

Is This the Maturation of Politics in Lesotho?

In the Name of Africa
For the first time in history, a former head of an African state, Hissene Habre of Chad, will stand trial in Africa, before an internationalized tribunal. In Senegal.

Dope Saint Jude messes with Cape Town’s head
Rap artist, Dope Saint Jude, is a nightmare for anyone stuck in the gender/race void of simplified constructions of identity.

Obroni, a History
Most Ghanaians think “obroni” means “white person” or “foreigner”, but it stems from the Akan phrase “abro nipa” meaning “wicked person.”

Summertime Vibes
Hipsters Don’t Dance “Top World Carnival Tunes” for February 2015.

Fresh eyes: Yannis Guibinga’s photos of Gabon
Guibinga documents the vibrant beach culture of the country’s capital, Libreville, on the West African coast.

President Obiang and the Samba School
Carnival in Rio de Janeiro as a site for the politics of influence by one of Africa’s most brutal dictatorships.

5 Questions for Filmmaker, Djo Munga
The Congolese cites the crime film, ‘Carlito’s Way,’ starring Al Paciono, as a project he wished he had made. You can see the inspiration in “Viva Riva,” his breakout film.